Can I cook water without a thermometer?

First off, I am new to tea. I just got a sample pack from Adagio, and I want to try it. The only problem is that I do not have a thermometer to judge the water temperature. Is there any way to get my water to the right temperature without a thermometer? (ex: Boil water, then let sit for x amount of time) Thanks!

The problem is getting it to be reliable. It's not simply a question of how long you let it sit, but how big is the vessel the water sits in? How thick are the walls? How cool is the room? Is there a breeze? Is it sitting on an insulating mat or a cold granite counter? Lid on, or lid off? Is the teapot full or half full?

You can figure out for your average conditions how long you have to wait to get the water temperature to make tea you prefer, but I can't tell you how long to wait.

Digital thermometers are inexpensive--$10 on amazon, about the same price in brick & mortar stores, and made the single most important improvement in my tea brewing, more than any other utensil or tool.

Not strict precision, perhaps, but I hated green teas--unless they were massively dosed with jasmine--until I got a thermometer and started brewing them with the right temperature water. The thermometer opened up a whole range of previously inaccessible teas for me.

Not strict precision, perhaps, but I hated green teas--unless they were massively dosed with jasmine--until I got a thermometer and started brewing them with the right temperature water. The thermometer opened up a whole range of previously inaccessible teas for me.

+1..for Japanese green tea's water temp control is quite important.. so I guess it depends on what kind of teas you got in your ampler as well to start out with? were they blacks? oolongs? those you could prob do without a thermo right now and plan on getting one later.

Not strict precision, perhaps, but I hated green teas--unless they were massively dosed with jasmine--until I got a thermometer and started brewing them with the right temperature water. The thermometer opened up a whole range of previously inaccessible teas for me.

+1..for Japanese green tea's water temp control is quite important.. so I guess it depends on what kind of teas you got in your ampler as well to start out with? were they blacks? oolongs? those you could prob do without a thermo right now and plan on getting one later.

I guess I left 'entry level' a little too open-ended. I consider sencha and the like to be low-intermediate.

But yes, temperature control and a few other bits of technique to make it possible to tease out elusive deliciousness out of some teas and tisanes.

for green and white teas you can estimate easily by taking the kettle off when small bubbles start forming in the water and you can begin to see steam coming from the spout...that´s all I did for years.

Now I have a kettle that lets me set automatic shutoffs at different temperatures...the only difference is that I don´t need to pay as much attention to the water boiling...I still get the same results even from very temperature sensitive teas like sencha as I did when watching for the little bubbles to appear.

entropyembrace wrote:For brewing black tea and oolong you can just use boiling water

for green and white teas you can estimate easily by taking the kettle off when small bubbles start forming in the water and you can begin to see steam coming from the spout...that´s all I did for years.

Now I have a kettle that lets me set automatic shutoffs at different temperatures...the only difference is that I don´t need to pay as much attention to the water boiling...I still get the same results even from very temperature sensitive teas like sencha as I did when watching for the little bubbles to appear.

Proinsias wrote:Each to their own but personally I can't be bothered with scales and thermometers.

I believe this does indeed play a large part in how one chooses to brew, it does for me.

So, give me a scale, thermometer, and timer ... all digital of course, and I am happy as a clam. I seriously quite enjoy brewing this way (and definitely the results), well for greens and whites anyway.

Chip wrote:... BTW, on the subject of timers, I set mine for "count up," turn it on at the beginning of a green tea session and pay little attention to it ... plus no flippin' beepin'.

same here! plus its built into my thermo..it sticks to the side of my fridge so its always handy right where i make my tea. my thermo has a long wire so it stretches out a couple feet too.

Chained to the frdge? That would be OK if it was a TeaFridge!~

Zensuji wrote:That's a good idea chip. Because at the moment on my own I'm fine but when I make tea for a friend there's a few long silences while I stand there and count in my head.

Actually, the feature was not even listed on the package, I suspect many timers have this feature even if you don't know it. To see if yours has a count up feature, when cleared and on 0, press start ...